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As US intervention grows:
Colombian army lays siege to Medellín neighborhood
By Bill Vann
19 October 2002
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Colombian assault troops and police backed by tanks and helicopter
gunships laid siege Wednesday to an impoverished neighborhood
in Medellín, the South American nations second largest
city.
The operation, the biggest counterinsurgency campaign to be
waged in a crowded urban area in recent years, was launched on
the direct order of Colombias new right-wing president,
Alvaro Uribe.
At least 14 people were killed in the first day of fighting,
including a 16-year-old boy. Scores were wounded, most of them
old people, women and children.
Medellíns mayor, Luis Pérez, said Uribe
had instructed the army to continue the operation until it secures
full control of the district, known as Comuna 13, which is home
to some 130,000 of Medellíns 2.5 million people.
General Mario Montoya, the army commander in the Medellín
area, said that his forces intended to carry out house-to-house
searches in a hunt for weapons.
The military assault was preceded by violent attacks by right-wing
paramilitary units that work in close collaboration with the army.
Both the military and the rightist paramilitaries are attempting
to wrest control of the area from a militia known as the Armed
Command of the People, which is affiliated to Colombias
second-largest guerrilla movement, the National Liberation Army.
The Colombian office of the United Nations High Commissioner
on Human Rights expressed its deep concern over the
clashes.
Many residents of the neighborhood said that the army assault
had forced them to take cover in their homes, preventing them
from going to work, while some 6,000 students were kept out of
schools and health clinics in the area were shut down. High-powered
bullets in some cases found their victims after crashing through
the windows and walls of homes.
Wounded civilians who streamed into the health clinic in the
San Javier neighborhood recounted how a helicopter gunship flew
over and began firing its machine-gun into the crowded residential
area.
Were under fire from machine-guns, one distraught
woman told the local media. The bullets come out of the
helicopters and fall onto our roofs. It is terrifying. This is
like Vietnam.
This escalation of military repression coincides with a marked
increase in the US intervention in Colombias 38-year-old
civil war. Washington revealed earlier this month that US Army
Special Forces units are being deployed in the country this month
for the purpose of training a new Colombian special forces commando
battalion dedicated to fighting the armed guerrilla organizations.
Last week, the Bush administration gave official authorization
for the Colombian government to use military aid granted under
Plan Colombiawhose ostensible purpose was to combat coca
cultivation and the export of cocainefor counterinsurgency
operations against the guerrillas. This would include the use
of US-supplied Black Hawk helicopters and other equipment.
Congress also recently authorized the Pentagon to begin training
two Colombian army brigades that will be assigned permanently
to protect the Cano-Limon pipeline, which carries oil that is
being pumped out of fields in northern Colombia by Los Angeles-based
Occidental Petroleum.
Special Forces units have begun arriving in the country to
train the 5th and 18th Brigades of the Colombian Army to guard
the pipeline. Both brigades have been charged by human rights
groups with abuses against the civilian population and with working
closely with the paramilitary death squads.
Colombia is one of Latin Americas poorest nations. The
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization issued a recent
report indicating that fully 11 million Colombians, or approximately
one in three, live in poverty. Even the government has recognized
that the roots of the countrys endemic political violence
is widespread misery and the vast gulf between rich and poor.
For US corporate interests, however, Colombias strategic
importance is linked to oil. While the countrys known oil
reserves amount to 2.6 billion barrels, only about 20 percent
of its potential oil fields have been explored. Even now, Colombia
is producing roughly the equivalent amount of petroleum that Kuwait
supplied on the eve of the last Persian Gulf War. Together with
neighboring Venezuela and Ecuador, it supplies the US market with
more oil than all of the Persian Gulf producers combined.
Washingtons growing military role in Colombia is aimed
essentially at assuring access to this oil, and repressing not
only the armed guerrilla movements, but any popular opposition
to US corporate domination of the countrys natural resources.
Occidental Petroleum, Amoco, the ill-fated Enron Corporationwhich
owned Centragas, a 357-mile natural gas distribution system in
northern Colombiaand several other energy firms have jointly
lobbied Congress and the administration for increased military
aid and involvement in Colombia.
Meanwhile, Amnesty International released a report based on
its own investigations as well as those of the United Nations
and the Organization of American States warning that President
Uribes security policies will only serve to entrench
the cycle of violence affecting the whole of Colombia.
The report noted that since 1985, more than 60,000 have been
killed, four out of five of them civilians, and most of them victims
of massacres by right-wing paramilitaries. Last year alone, more
than 4,000 civilians were killed in political violence, the human
rights group said, and the toll for 2002 is likely to be higher.
Those displaced by the conflict, tortured or disappeared
number in the hundreds of thousands.
Presenting the report at a Madrid press conference, Marcelo
Pollack, an investigator for Amnesty International, said that
evidence gathered by the human rights group as well as other agencies
had demonstrated that the link between the armed forces
and the paramilitaries is an institutional relationship.
The report states: As the Colombian armed forces have
faced mounting international condemnation for human rights violations
in recent years they have resorted increasingly to the use of
paramilitary auxiliaries to implement the dirty war
tactics. The security forces can no longer depend on traditional
judicial mechanisms of impunity. International and national attention
is increasingly focused on the urgent need to dismantle these
mechanisms which have until now guaranteed that members of the
armed forces would, in all but the most exceptional cases, escape
investigation or appropriate sanction. To circumvent these pressures,
those responsible for designing and implementing the dirty
war can continue their strategy without fear of prosecution
by devolving these tasks to paramilitary forces.
This report further exposes the fraud of legislation passed
by the US Congress making the Colombian governments observance
of human rights standards a prerequisite for the release of military
aid. The act demands effective action to sever ties between the
Colombian army and the paramilitaries. Last month, the State Department
once again certified Colombias compliance with
the act, clearing the way for the release of another $70 million
in training, arms and munitions Amnesty International also condemned
the governments attempt to create a network of civilian
informers that would recruit up to one million Colombians to aid
the military in counterinsurgency operations. The Army claims
it has already signed up 40,000. This initiative, the human rights
group warned, will inevitably further fuel the spiral of
political violence. The creation of similar civilian units
in the province of Antioquia, when Uribe was governor, gave rise
to death squads that in many cases became the forerunners of the
present paramilitary units.
The report provides a detailed account of the reign of terror
implemented by the Colombian army and its paramilitary allies
in San Vicente del Caguán, one of five municipalities that
made up the demilitarized zone that was controlled by the Revolutionary
Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.
After talks between the government and the guerrillas were
broken off last February, the town, which served as the guerrilla
organizations headquarters, was retaken by the military
in an operation that included an aerial bombardment that inflicted
heavy civilian casualties.
According to the human rights group, the military has branded
the districts civilian population as guerrilla collaborators,
subjecting them to a relentless campaign of harassment. This has
included the arbitrary searches of workers and peasants
homes, accompanied by the destruction and theft of property and
the burning of some residences. The military has also arrested
many people without charges, refusing to inform relatives that
they are under detention or why they have been taken.
Residents of the area also recounted incidents in which those
detained have been physically tortured to force them to identify
members of the FARC or their collaborators from photo albums carried
by military interrogators. One young unemployed man told Amnesty
International that soldiers had wrapped a wet towel around his
head, blocking his nose and mouth, and then poured water on it,
asphyxiating him. When he continued to deny that he was a guerrilla,
they went on to other methods.
So they burned me with a cigarette in the neck,
he said. They asked me how long I had been with the guerrillas
and I said I wasnt a guerrilla, so they burned my arms and
feet with the cigarette [...] They threw me to the ground and
stamped on my face, feet and arms and began to cut my feet and
stomach with a machete. They grabbed my testicles and placed the
edge of the machete on them [...] I then felt a blow to my head
and passed out.
See Also:
As workers launch general
strike
Colombia's President Uribe intensifies repression
[19 September 2002]
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